In the excerpt of “Games at Twilight” by Anita Desai, the best line that suggests that the children have completely forgotten about Ravi is “They have quite forgotten him”. As the story goes on, the reader was let known that a lot of time has passed using the “Evening” and “Twilight”. From afternoon that they started to twilight could be along time for one round of hide and seek.
The correct answer is the following.
Although there is no excerpt attached or another kind of reference, we can say that the question refers to the story of Frankenstein, written by English writer Mary Shelley in 1818.
In this story, power corrupts in that the monster tries to create revenge against Victor. The monster or the creature knows that it was created in such a way by Victor that it won't be able to fit into society. The creature can't control its hunger for killing people who are close to Victor.
That is why, when today people can control their actions it is said that "they cannot control the monster inside."
What’re they good for? Well, here’s our best Shmoop expert opinion: when you read a line of poetry aloud, your eyes (and therefore your voice) tend to speed on to the end of the line. Try it and see. When you read "in Just-," however, the spaces slow your eyes down. More importantly, they slow your voice down, as well. As you’re reading, you’re thinking, "Huh? I totally don’t know whether to pause for the spaces or not!" And even in that time that it takes to think that through, your voice slows oh-so-slightly. Kind of cool, huh?
Dear (friend),
You should do your homework so that you understand the subject taught in class. If you don't do your homework, your grades will drop and you will not receive a good grade in the class.
Your friend,
(Name)
Answer:
The poet used poetic devices such as rhyme scheme and parallelism, making it a lyrical poem
Explanation: